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EDITORS’ NOTES

Brett Eldredge's 2013 debut introduced a next-gen country artist who could play it straight or push the envelope with equal ease. The funky, poppy "On and On" operates on a syncopated groove that's hooky as all get-out, and "Gotta Get There" combines loose-limbed R&B rhythms with hip-hop-informed vocal phrasing. Yet the piano-led power ballad "Waited Too Long" and the randy twangfest "Tell Me Where to Park" suggest a strong influence from a previous generation of country boys.

Bring You Back

EDITORS’ NOTES

Brett Eldredge's 2013 debut introduced a next-gen country artist who could play it straight or push the envelope with equal ease. The funky, poppy "On and On" operates on a syncopated groove that's hooky as all get-out, and "Gotta Get There" combines loose-limbed R&B rhythms with hip-hop-informed vocal phrasing. Yet the piano-led power ballad "Waited Too Long" and the randy twangfest "Tell Me Where to Park" suggest a strong influence from a previous generation of country boys.

TITLE

TIME

Tell Me Where To Park

2:57

Don't Ya

3:01

Bring You Back

3:11

On and On

3:08

Gotta Get There

3:23

One Mississippi

3:45

Beat of the Music

2:59

Waited Too Long

3:59

Mean To Me

3:48

Signs

3:53

Raymond

3:39

Go On Without Me

3:16

One Mississippi (Live from CMT "Listen Up")

4:10

13 Songs, 45 Minutes

℗ 2013 Atlantic Recording Corporation for the United States and WEA International Inc. for the world outside of the United States

About Brett Eldredge

Singing country music with a soulful edge and more than a dash of pop polish, Brett Eldredge was born in Paris, Illinois on March 23, 1986, and grew up listening to singers Ray Charles, Frank Sinatra, and Bobby Darin. After hearing Brooks & Dunn at the age of 16, he became fascinated by country music, a fascination that stayed with him when he began attending Elmhurst College in Chicago. After a trip to Nashville, where he heard his cousin Terry Eldredge (a veteran of Dolly Parton's band and a member of the Grascals) play at the Station Inn, Eldredge was inspired to transfer to Middle Tennessee State University, immersing himself in the vocal stylings of country singers like George Jones, Ray Price, and Vince Gill. He also began working on writing his own material and started performing at songwriter nights in the Nashville area. Eventually he was introduced to producer and publisher Byron Gallimore, who signed Eldredge to his publishing company and encouraged him to keep writing songs.

Eldredge began tracking some of the best of his compositions, and following a showcase in Nashville, signed a recording offer from Atlantic Records. Eldredge's first single, "Raymond," a poignant song about an Alzheimer's patient, was issued in September of 2010 and earned respectable radio play. Eldredge's next single, 2011's "It Ain't Gotta Be Love," didn't fare as well, but 2012's "Don't Ya" was a genuine hit, selling over a million units and peaking at number five on the Country Singles chart. In August 2013, Eldredge issued his first album, Bring You Back, which included "Raymond" and "Don't Ya" as well as subsequent hits "Beat of the Music" and "Mean to Me." Eldredge was one of the opening acts on Taylor Swift's 2013 concert tour, and in 2015 he toured in tandem with Darius Rucker. May 2015 brought Eldredge another country hit, "Lose My Mind," which rose to number 12 on the Hot Country Songs chart, and "Just a Taste" followed in July 2015.

Released on September 11, 2015, Eldredge's second album, Illinois, solidified his country stardom thanks to a pair of singles that reached number two on Billboard's Hot Country chart: "Lose My Mind" and "Drunk on Your Love." "Wanna Be That Song," which peaked at 17, kept Illinois on the charts into 2016, and in October of that year he released the holiday album Glow. Eldredge delivered the single "Somethin' I'm Good At" in February 2017, six months prior to the August release of his eponymous third album. ~ Steve Leggett